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FM
Former Member
POWER SHARING AND TRUST

October 14, 2011 | By KNews | Filed Under Features / Columnists, Peeping Tom
Source - Kaieteur News

Power sharing does not require trust, but power sharing without trust will quickly descend into power grabbing.

Power sharing failed in Northern Ireland. Constitutionally entrenched power sharing was contemptuously ignored in Fiji. In Zimbabwe, where there was a negotiated process of power sharing following disputed elections, power sharing at the level of the executive has been rendered useless. The much-celebrated power sharing agreement in South Africa collapsed very early.

Power sharing has failed to bring about any form of unity between the factions involved, failed to bring about reconciliation and failed to achieve an effective working relationship between the conflicting parties. Power sharing does not require trust, but without trust, power sharing will descend into chaos.

In Guyana, several attempts at power sharing and political reconciliation got nowhere. In the days of Walter Rodney, the WPA proposed a power sharing proposal to reconstruct the country given the severe economic wounds that the then ruling PNC had inflicted on the society. The WPA made it clear then that the PNC could not become part of their power sharing arrangement. It saw no place for the PNC in a unity government.

Reconstruction has been achieved without a unity government. Whether power sharing would have hastened the reconstruction process is contestable. Guyana achieved economic reconstruction despite the protracted decline in political relations.

The government itself has been obstructionist and has failed to offer any meaningful concessions to the opposition, with or without pressure. In fact, the greater the opposition pressure, the stronger the government became, and this emboldened them to resist making any serious concessions to the administration.

Burnham was never serious about power sharing. He always used that to remind the Americans that if they did not relax their pressures on him, he could always turn to their arch rival, Cheddi Jagan, the man who the Americans feared the most, other than Fidel Castro.

The present ruling regime in Guyana also has just reason for being cautious in reaching out to the opposition. The main opposition has been duplicitous in its dealing with the ruling party. According to the ruling party, the opposition failed to honour informal agreements concerning the allocation of positions on local government bodies after the last local government elections and after the 2006 regional elections.

The main opposition, therefore, and in so far as the ruling party is concerned, cannot be fully trusted to keep its end of the bargain. The lack of trust is responsible for the poor state of relations between the ruling party and the government, and this is not going to help the cause of power sharing. At the same time, some of the very persons who have been plugging for power sharing have exposed their true nature.

When the President of Guyana went into one community, certain activists protested the welcome that he received. It was almost made out as if the President had no right to be there at all. How then can one build an effective power sharing relationship when such sentiments are expressed?

The ruling party has no doubt been left with the clear impression that the real intentions of its critics are not at all about power sharing but about power. Trust is missing, and building trust is required to bridge the chasm and not necessarily to ensure the success of power sharing.

This is something that is not appreciated. If there is a breakdown in relations between two parties, there first has to be some basis for bridging the differences. Some process of building trust is necessary, which can then lead to discussions about power sharing which requires convergence on other issues.

Differences have to be overcome. In order to bridge these differences there is a need for developing a working arrangement. Establishing this relationship requires trust. But when one leader called for building this trust by sharing power at the least common denominator, it was rejected outright since it was claimed that what was necessary is not power sharing activists, what is needed is not power sharing at the lower levels but at the highest levels. That is, it is power at the top that matters, not the building of trust from the bottom up.

Those still serious about power sharing, those still able to muster the political will to pursue this line, must accept that what matters is not any arrangement of power sharing, but rather one that genuinely secures the concerns of all sides. And this involves building trust, however discredited this notion has become because of the attitude of the ruling party towards the sharing of political responsibility.

Trust can only be built by working together. This can happen within parliament and outside of parliament, but this working together must not be seen as an end to itself, but rather as the means towards a more inclusive relationship.

By now it should be clear to all that the government is only keen on working with others based on its own terms. But a new government will come into power later this year with a new President, and even though it seems now clear that the PPP will win the presidency, it must not be assumed that the new leader will simply follow in the footsteps of his predecessor when it comes to inclusive governance.

Inclusive governance can only get better, not worse. But just how far inclusive governance will go and whether it will lead to power sharing depends on the building of trust after the elections would have finished.

The successful party always has a greater obligation to make a magnanimous gesture to the vanquished. And this has to take the form of more than words, because we have had a lot of words about political inclusiveness but very little meaningful progress.

But it would not do any harm for serious attempts at building trust and having improved relationships from the opposition also. After all, it takes two or more to come together.

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quote:

In Guyana, several attempts at power sharing and political reconciliation got nowhere. In the days of Walter Rodney, the WPA proposed a power sharing proposal to reconstruct the country given the severe economic wounds that the then ruling PNC had inflicted on the society.

The WPA made it clear then that the PNC could not become part of their power sharing arrangement. It saw no place for the PNC in a unity government.

FM
quote:

The main opposition, therefore, and in so far as the ruling party is concerned, cannot be fully trusted to keep its end of the bargain.

The lack of trust is responsible for the poor state of relations between the ruling party and the government, and this is not going to help the cause of power sharing.

At the same time, some of the very persons who have been plugging for power sharing have exposed their true nature.

FM
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:
POWER SHARING AND TRUST

October 14, 2011 | By KNews | Filed Under Features / Columnists, Peeping Tom
Source - Kaieteur News

Power sharing does not require trust, but power sharing without trust will quickly descend into power grabbing.

Power sharing failed in Northern Ireland. Constitutionally entrenched power sharing was contemptuously ignored in Fiji. In Zimbabwe, where there was a negotiated process of power sharing following disputed elections, power sharing at the level of the executive has been rendered useless. The much-celebrated power sharing agreement in South Africa collapsed very early.

Power sharing has failed to bring about any form of unity between the factions involved, failed to bring about reconciliation and failed to achieve an effective working relationship between the conflicting parties. Power sharing does not require trust, but without trust, power sharing will descend into chaos.

In Guyana, several attempts at power sharing and political reconciliation got nowhere. In the days of Walter Rodney, the WPA proposed a power sharing proposal to reconstruct the country given the severe economic wounds that the then ruling PNC had inflicted on the society. The WPA made it clear then that the PNC could not become part of their power sharing arrangement. It saw no place for the PNC in a unity government.

Reconstruction has been achieved without a unity government. Whether power sharing would have hastened the reconstruction process is contestable. Guyana achieved economic reconstruction despite the protracted decline in political relations.

The government itself has been obstructionist and has failed to offer any meaningful concessions to the opposition, with or without pressure. In fact, the greater the opposition pressure, the stronger the government became, and this emboldened them to resist making any serious concessions to the administration.

Burnham was never serious about power sharing. He always used that to remind the Americans that if they did not relax their pressures on him, he could always turn to their arch rival, Cheddi Jagan, the man who the Americans feared the most, other than Fidel Castro.

The present ruling regime in Guyana also has just reason for being cautious in reaching out to the opposition. The main opposition has been duplicitous in its dealing with the ruling party. According to the ruling party, the opposition failed to honour informal agreements concerning the allocation of positions on local government bodies after the last local government elections and after the 2006 regional elections.

The main opposition, therefore, and in so far as the ruling party is concerned, cannot be fully trusted to keep its end of the bargain. The lack of trust is responsible for the poor state of relations between the ruling party and the government, and this is not going to help the cause of power sharing. At the same time, some of the very persons who have been plugging for power sharing have exposed their true nature.

When the President of Guyana went into one community, certain activists protested the welcome that he received. It was almost made out as if the President had no right to be there at all. How then can one build an effective power sharing relationship when such sentiments are expressed?

The ruling party has no doubt been left with the clear impression that the real intentions of its critics are not at all about power sharing but about power. Trust is missing, and building trust is required to bridge the chasm and not necessarily to ensure the success of power sharing.

This is something that is not appreciated. If there is a breakdown in relations between two parties, there first has to be some basis for bridging the differences. Some process of building trust is necessary, which can then lead to discussions about power sharing which requires convergence on other issues.

Differences have to be overcome. In order to bridge these differences there is a need for developing a working arrangement. Establishing this relationship requires trust. But when one leader called for building this trust by sharing power at the least common denominator, it was rejected outright since it was claimed that what was necessary is not power sharing activists, what is needed is not power sharing at the lower levels but at the highest levels. That is, it is power at the top that matters, not the building of trust from the bottom up.

Those still serious about power sharing, those still able to muster the political will to pursue this line, must accept that what matters is not any arrangement of power sharing, but rather one that genuinely secures the concerns of all sides. And this involves building trust, however discredited this notion has become because of the attitude of the ruling party towards the sharing of political responsibility.

Trust can only be built by working together. This can happen within parliament and outside of parliament, but this working together must not be seen as an end to itself, but rather as the means towards a more inclusive relationship.

By now it should be clear to all that the government is only keen on working with others based on its own terms. But a new government will come into power later this year with a new President, and even though it seems now clear that the PPP will win the presidency, it must not be assumed that the new leader will simply follow in the footsteps of his predecessor when it comes to inclusive governance.

Inclusive governance can only get better, not worse. But just how far inclusive governance will go and whether it will lead to power sharing depends on the building of trust after the elections would have finished.

The successful party always has a greater obligation to make a magnanimous gesture to the vanquished. And this has to take the form of more than words, because we have had a lot of words about political inclusiveness but very little meaningful progress.

But it would not do any harm for serious attempts at building trust and having improved relationships from the opposition also. After all, it takes two or more to come together.

Dem Guy:

 

Read this again.  Is it still relevant TODAY?

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Power Sharing is Garbage. Just look at the Opposition behavior with just ONE Seat advantage. I rest my case. Come Monday the ARE going to put the Guyanese People lives at the bottom of the Barrel, thump their chests, delay, destruct and destroy.

 What a moron! Democracy is the most expressive form of powersharing. Power Sharing as a label attached to accommodating factions in conflict is the a defined and principled methodology to address conflict transformation. It has worked in many states while it has indeed failed catastrophically in others.

 

Power Sharing for Guyana will indeed be problematic. It will be elite accommodation because our people are not the problem but the major parties are the dysfunctional ones since the system allows them that latitude.If it is to be broached it should be a temporary arrangement with a finite non renewable time limit to reform the system constitutionally.

 

We can achieve democracy with a re arranging the way our system is configured.  We can change the way the legislature is defined and the way power is allocated and reserved. We can re distribute power by direct representation in forging a true republic not one in name only. With directly elected representatives we will have parliamentarians who the people know from their works and who can retain their seat if the vote against party principle. It can also be strengthened if the electoral system is multi vote ( first and second preferences etc) and if the constituencies is layered by two houses with overlapping constituencies. We can not  continue  to let a crooked cabal like the PPP feed off our nation as perfect parasites.

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Power Sharing is Garbage. Just look at the Opposition behavior with just ONE Seat advantage. I rest my case. Come Monday the ARE going to put the Guyanese People lives at the bottom of the Barrel, thump their chests, delay, destruct and destroy.

 What a moron! Democracy is the most expressive form of powersharing. Power Sharing as a label attached to accommodating factions in conflict is the a defined and principled methodology to address conflict transformation. It has worked in many states while it has indeed failed catastrophically in others. Power Sharing for guyana will indeed be problematic. It will be elite accommodation because our people are not the problem but the major parties are the dysfunctional ones since the system allows them that latitude. We can achieve democracy with a re arranging the way ours is configured.  We can change the way the legislature is defined and the way power is allocated and reserved. 


And Guyana can ever get  what you described with the kind of opposition it has??????????????????

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Power Sharing is Garbage. Just look at the Opposition behavior with just ONE Seat advantage. I rest my case. Come Monday the ARE going to put the Guyanese People lives at the bottom of the Barrel, thump their chests, delay, destruct and destroy.

 What a moron! Democracy is the most expressive form of powersharing. Power Sharing as a label attached to accommodating factions in conflict is the a defined and principled methodology to address conflict transformation. It has worked in many states while it has indeed failed catastrophically in others. Power Sharing for guyana will indeed be problematic. It will be elite accommodation because our people are not the problem but the major parties are the dysfunctional ones since the system allows them that latitude. We can achieve democracy with a re arranging the way ours is configured.  We can change the way the legislature is defined and the way power is allocated and reserved. 


And Guyana can ever get  what you described with the kind of opposition it has??????????????????

 The opposition is the only one asking for changes. The PPP is going to court to demand enforcement of  the dictatorial reserves in the constitution.

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Morons usually live in a world of make belief and certainly that is where you belong. Go Figure!

 What make you think you live in the real world? And morons are morons because they continually demonstrate abject incapacity to grasp simple concepts. Like you they are abundant with non informational statements strung together by silly made up words and offered with flourishes of self approbation that is as transparent as glass.

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Morons usually live in a world of make belief and certainly that is where you belong. Go Figure!

 What make you think you live in the real world? And morons are morons because they continually demonstrate abject incapacity to grasp simple concepts. Like you they are abundant with non informational statements strung together by silly made up words and offered with flourishes of self approbation that is as transparent as glass.

Because ONLY a MORON will ask a Govt NOT to follow the CONSTITUTION. That is as MORONIC as one can get and in a Nutshell, THAT IS YOU.!!!

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Morons usually live in a world of make belief and certainly that is where you belong. Go Figure!

 What make you think you live in the real world? And morons are morons because they continually demonstrate abject incapacity to grasp simple concepts. Like you they are abundant with non informational statements strung together by silly made up words and offered with flourishes of self approbation that is as transparent as glass.

Because ONLY a MORON will ask a Govt NOT to follow the CONSTITUTION. That is as MORONIC as one can get and in a Nutshell, THAT IS YOU.!!!

easy there Nehru. everything will balance out. check pm/

Sheik101
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Morons usually live in a world of make belief and certainly that is where you belong. Go Figure!

 What make you think you live in the real world? And morons are morons because they continually demonstrate abject incapacity to grasp simple concepts. Like you they are abundant with non informational statements strung together by silly made up words and offered with flourishes of self approbation that is as transparent as glass.

Because ONLY a MORON will ask a Govt NOT to follow the CONSTITUTION. That is as MORONIC as one can get and in a Nutshell, THAT IS YOU.!!!

 Morons blindly follow rules even if bad. The Constitution was forged in tyranny and deceit and the PPP is on record insisting that such is the case. Constitutions are agreements between citizens and the state to structure and  accommodate healthy life in the society. It is an instrument of fairness not tyranny.

 

One is well advised to follow the rule of justice and change unjust laws before revolutionary action of a disgusted polis  intercede to change it themselves. Look to the disintegral states of the former soviet union and recently to the arab spring if you need to be assured you are not a moron.

FM
Originally Posted by Sheik101:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Morons usually live in a world of make belief and certainly that is where you belong. Go Figure!

 What make you think you live in the real world? And morons are morons because they continually demonstrate abject incapacity to grasp simple concepts. Like you they are abundant with non informational statements strung together by silly made up words and offered with flourishes of self approbation that is as transparent as glass.

Because ONLY a MORON will ask a Govt NOT to follow the CONSTITUTION. That is as MORONIC as one can get and in a Nutshell, THAT IS YOU.!!!

easy there Nehru. everything will balance out. check pm/

Bannas, I man cool but this old head trying to ram his fragmented ideas upon others.

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Sheik101:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Morons usually live in a world of make belief and certainly that is where you belong. Go Figure!

 What make you think you live in the real world? And morons are morons because they continually demonstrate abject incapacity to grasp simple concepts. Like you they are abundant with non informational statements strung together by silly made up words and offered with flourishes of self approbation that is as transparent as glass.

Because ONLY a MORON will ask a Govt NOT to follow the CONSTITUTION. That is as MORONIC as one can get and in a Nutshell, THAT IS YOU.!!!

easy there Nehru. everything will balance out. check pm/

Bannas, I man cool but this old head trying to ram his fragmented ideas upon others.

 They would be fragmented to if the pieces of are yet to be put together in your head. Out here in the world what I say is the norm and not  as in your fractured reality.

FM

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